Hey!
I was browsing a Wikipedia article about the oldest companies in the world that still operate. The oldest one dates back to 578 AD!
List of top ten companies below and also 2 charts showing the top ten industries and number of oldest companies by country:
| Year | Company | Country | Industry |
| 578 | Kongō Gumi | Japan | Construction |
| 705 | Nishiyama Onsen Keiunkan | Japan | Hotel |
| 717 | Koman | Japan | Hotel |
| 718 | Hōshi Ryokan | Japan | Hotel |
| 771 | Genda Shigyō | Japan | Ceremonial paper goods |
| 803 | St. Peter Stiftskulinarium | Austria | Restaurant |
| 862 | Staffelter Hof | Germany | Wine |
| 864 | Monnaie de Paris | France | Mint |
| 885 | Tanaka-Iga | Japan | Religious goods |
| 900 | Sean's Bar | Ireland | Pub |
Short timeline about the once family-owned construction company Kongō Gumi, which has been operating for over 1400 years:
578 AD - Korean immigrant Shigemitsu Kongō was invited to Japan by the Royal Family to build a Buddhist temple and decided to create his own company
1583 - Osaka castle is built
2005 - 100 employees and $70MM annual revenue
*2006 - 50th generation of Kongō leads the company
2006 - Liquidation and sold to Takamatsu Construction Company
Main takeaways for me, also from this article:
Why I'm doing it
Do let me know your thoughts. I'm keen to keep the ball rolling
Edited
Just saw a snippet from Company of One from @pjrvs where he describes the rise and fall of Kongō Gumi
Added table of top 3 industries for top 7 countries
Ps.: sorry about the images quality. I'm learning how to add inline images (using imgur atm). Any tips on that @rosieSherry?
... and from this point of view you can call a 100 years old enterprise a young company 😂
Thanks for sharing - this is super interesting! I remember finding out that Zildjian (maker of cymbals) has been in the same family since the 1600s and thinking that was impressive... but 578 is a whole other level!
Here's a cool read on the Ziljians as well - the company survived a move from Constantinople to Norwell, Mass.
Cool! Thanks for sharing! I like the family rules: go work elsewhere to get experience, family member never reports to another, never had spouses in the business...
Interesting!
What's also interesting about many of these old companies, is they're very much "main things:" restaurants, hotels, breweries, winemakers, pharmacies, construction companies.
Coronavirus has certainly disrupted hotels and restaurants, but liquor sales, pharmacies, and construction companies seem to be doing well.
Guess it’s Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. The stuff at the bottom of the pyramid is never going to go anywhere. But the top of the pyramid...
a) isn’t necessary for survival
b) the solutions for top of pyramid are constantly being reinvented
And booze is a proxy for top of pyramid in the short term 😄
Japan, Germany, UK and France all have booze on top! See the updated table